Page 4 - The iAdian Daily*- Saturday,'JiJy' t6,1983 FBI investigation of beating death extended (Contnuedfrom Page 3) a possible life sentence if they are convicted. MEANWHILE, Chin's supporters have filed an appeal and are waiting to hear if an appeals court of the State Supreme Court will hear the case. Former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Brennan has agreed to act as counsel in Chin's ease. The American Citizens for Justice, a primarily Asian-American group, was unsuccessful in its attempt last month to convince Kaufman to withdraw his sentence. BUT THE group has continued to lob- by nationwide for support despite the initial setback, and has sent delegations to Chicago, New York, Washington, D.C., and the west coast. Senator dig low NAA Ci DETROIT (UPI) - Sen. Ernest Hollings (D-South Carolina) said yesterday his failing grade from the NAACP was misleading, arguing he has shown growth on civil rights issues over the years. Invoking the memory of another southern politician who is now viewed as a civil rights champion, Hollings said that if Lyndon Johnson had been rated before becoming president, "They would have lynched him." THE presidential hopeful commented on the NAACP rating before the Democratic National Committee and in a news conference afterwards. The NAACP gave the South Carolina Democrat a failing grade recently, saying he was on the right side of civil rights issues only 39.8 percent of the time. Hollings called it "totally misleading." "I'M FIGHTING Ronald Reagan Denis. attack I (Continued from Page 3) "WE NEED to expand the party to include more people," Jackson said. Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) arrived to speak later in the day, despite initial rumors that he would stay in Washington along with scheduled speaker and presidential hopeful Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo.). to participate in the debate over the MX missile. Glenn, who recent opinion polls hve shown to be the strongest Democratic challenger to President Reagan, said BOB DASCOLA and staff South U & East U are now at DASCOLA STYLISTS 668-9329 opposite Jocobsons "(The case) has taken on wide im- plications for Asian-Americans, and all Americans," said Liza Chan, the South- field attorney who worked for the American Citizens for Justice to ask Kaufman to reconsider his sentence. More than 800 demonstrators rallied at a May protest in Detroit's Kennedy square, which included two busloads of Chin supporters from Ann Arbor. A similar rally was held in New York on the same day. Chan said the group will also continue to aid the FBI's investigation. The FBI is currently interviewing witnessesfamily members, and frien- ds, and is gathering police and lab reports. FBI Special Agent John An- thoy said the investigation should last two to three weeks. sputes P rating across the board and they put me in the same tub with him," he said at a news conference. The Senator later said he was hurt by the inclusion of votes he cast during the 1960s. "There are a lot of votes there we've certainly turned the corner on," he said. "Over 30 yars, we've learned." Congressman Mickey Leland, chair- man of the DNC black caucus said, "Considering where (Hollings) is coming from he has a coniderable record (on the minority affairs), par- ticularly in the last few years." "Historically he's had a lot of problems," Leland added, however. Blacks are growing more sophisticated politically, the Texas Democrat said, and many now sub- scribe to the policy "no permanent friends, no permanent enemies, just permanent interests." "They are forgiving but they also remember" LeLand said. Reaganornies he would push for a stronger educational emphasis in educational fundamentals such as math, science, foreign languages, and computer science. Glenn, who is aformer astronaut and 23-year veteran of the Marine Corps, said that although he had originally been against SALT II, he would lead the fight against deployment of the MX missile and would support nuclear ar- ms reductions. Like Mondale, Glenn also said he would push for womens rights. Noting that the average woman currently makes less than the average high school dropout on the job, Glenn added he would like to see women receive equal pay in the workplace. WANTED: Volunteer Slack male sub- jects to serve as cantrols fr Sickle Cell Anemia research. Study invlves twahors time, bled drawing, urine ollectien. $25 cmpensatien. Call 763.3530 between 9-11 and 1-4 weekdays. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Bomb blast kills 6 in Paris PARIS - Terrorists set off a bomb at the Turkish Airlines counter at Orly Aiport yesterday, and police said five people were slain and 60 were injured, many of them seriously burned. Armenian extremists claimed respon- sibility. The same group - The Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Ar- menia - also claimed responsibility for the assassination of a Turkish diplomat in Brussels Thursday. The blast occurred in a corner of the terminal that has about six check-in counters on each side. The area of about 30 feet square was strewn with suit- cases, some of them blown open. Bits of clothing and plastic bags were thrown about on the floor in a large smear of blood. Police said one unidentified dead man could have been the person carrying the bomb - made of explosives attached to a gas bottle. Two of those who died at the airport were identified as a Frenchman and a Turk. Two others died later at hospitals and their nationalities were not immediately known. Cult leader and aides arraigned ALLEGAN - House of Judah "Prophet" William A. Lewis and four of his followers were arraigned yesterday on charges of cruelty to the cult's children, including a 12-year-old boy who died of repeated beatings. Lewis, 61; his son William L. Lewis, 38; Theodore Jones, 39; Robert McGee, 29; and Larry Branson, 29, face a maximum sentence of four years in prison if convicted. Lewis, self-appointed leader of black Israelite Jews, and the other four were arrested Thursday night on a warrant issued by Allegan County Prosecutor Fred R. Hunter III. All 66 children in Lewis' religious encampment were removed under court order and placed in temporary foster homes last week following an in- vestigation into the July 4 death of 12-year-old John Yarbough. Ethel Yarbough, 33, the boy's mother, pleaded innocent to a manslaughter charge at her arraignment yesterday. Lebanese troops win first battle BEIRUT, Lebanon - The Lebanese army won the first major test of its authority yesterday, flushing out nearly 100 Shiite Moslem militiamen in nearly seven hours of heavy firing in west Beirut and hauling them off to jail. Police reported one soldier and three militiamen killed and 100 soldiers and 11 civilians wounded. The government television service said 90 people were arrested. Government and army spokesmen said Amal militiamen fired a bazooka and maching gun bursts at the approaching soldiers, prompting the army command to send in several tanks and armored personnel carriers. The fighting spread throughout the area just inside the Moslem sector of Beirut. The militiamen fired rifles, maching guns and rocket-propelled grenades from windows, roofs and alleys while the tanks pounded their positions. Then foot soldiers worked their way slowly and cautiously down the narrow streets, clearing out the gunmen. Hostages say Sudanese guerillas terrorized remote African town NAIROBI, Kenya - Sudanese guerrillas who held five Western hostages for two weeks terrorized local inhabitants with beatings, whippings and by threatening to throw employees of a local mission off a cliff, the freed hostages said yesterday. They said the rebels were inspired by the American hostage crisis in Iran. The people of Boma, a remote area of southeastern Sudan, were relieved July 8 when a Sudanese army commando team crushed the insurgents, many of them local tribesmen fighting for regional autonomy, said John Haspels, 38, of Lyons, Kan., wh6 ran the mission at Boma. "After seeing the way they meted out justice in Boma, I see no justice in their cause at all," Haspels said, referring to the Libyan-backed Liberation Front of Southern Sudan, a group fighting to rid southern black Sudan from domination by the Arab north. Lease on Greek bases extended ATHENS, Greece - Greece and the United States initialed an agreement yesterday extending the lease on American bases in Greece for five years and promising the Greeks $500 million in military aid next year.. Premier Andreas Papandreou told a news conference the agreement gives the United States 17 months after the end of the period to dismantle its four major bases and more than 20 minor installations. But U.S. officials in Washington said the agreement would continue in for- ce after the five years elapsed unless the Greeks give written notice of ter- mination. More than 3,000 leftist demonstrators marched through the streets of Athens chanting anti-American slogans after the agreement was announced. Extra guards were stationed outside the U.S. Embassy, and there was no violence, police said. The premier said the agreement "is an historic step in the establishment of the principle that regardless of the size and strength of countries, Greece is an equal member of the international community."